OPINION
This is an appeal from a decree terminating the parental rights of appellant, K.M., under TEX.FAM.CODE ANN. sec. 15.02 (Vernon 1986). Trial was to the jury. K.M. has perfected this appeal.
Appellant is the biological mother of two girls: L.R.M., age six, and J.J.M., age five. The two girls have different fathers; neither father prоvided financial support for the children. On August 23,1986, the Fort Worth Police Department investigated a complaint that appellant’s boyfriend, O.D., sexually abused L.R.M. On August 25, 1986, the Juvenile Court of Tarrant County ordered the children placed under the temporary managing conservatorship of the Texas Department of Human Services. On September 21, 1987, the controversy was submitted to a jury on special issues and the trial court terminated the parent-child relationships between the children and appellant as well as the relationships between the children and their respective fathers.
Appellant raises two points of error. Both points of error, one for each child, allege insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding appellant engaged in conduct or knowingly placed the children with persons who engaged in conduct which endan *65 gered the physical or emotional well-being of the children.
The nаtural right existing between parents and their children is of constitutional dimension.
Holick v. Smith,
In proceedings to terminate the parent-child relationship brought under TEX.FAM. CODE ANN. sec. 15.02, the petitioner must establish one оr more of the acts or omissions enumerated under subdivision (1) of the statute and must additionally prove, as required under subdivision (2) that termination of the parent-child relationship is in the best interest of the child.
Richardson v. Green,
Termination of parental rights is a drastic remedy and is of such weight and gravity that due process requires the petitioner to justify termination by “clear and convincing evidence.”
In re G.M.,
The clear and convincing standard of proof required at the trial level is well settled, but the standard of appellate review to be applied by this court is not as well defined. The State argues we should overrule appellant’s point of error if the trial court’s judgment is “supported by some evidence of probative value and is not against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.” To support this point, the State cites this court’s opinion in
City of Arlington v. Wayland,
Other states have considered whether a different standard of appellate review should apply when reviewing a case decided using the clear and convincing standard of proof. Some courts have held the appellate court should apply the same standard of review regardless which standard of proof was required at trial.
Webber v. Smith,
Texas law requires this court to determine if the trial court adhered to the clear and convincing standard of proof.
Baxter v. Tex. Dept. of Human Resources,
[I]t is the duty of the appellate court in reviеwing the evidence to determine, not whether the trier of fact could reasonably conclude that the existence of a fact is more probable than not, as in ordinary civil cases, but whether the trier of fact could reasonably conclude that the existence of thе fact is highly probable.
Neiswander,
In reaching its decision the Court оf Civil Appeals has sought to apply a third standard of reviewing the evidence presented at trial — -the “clear and convincing” standard. In Texas there are but two standards by which evidence is reviewed: factual sufficiency and legal sufficiency. The requirement of clear and cоnvincing evidence is merely another method of stating that a cause of action must be supported by factually sufficient evidence.
Id.
This court must still determine whether the evidence at trial was factually sufficient to support a finding of clear and convincing evidence.
Compare Ayres,
Other principles of law relating to sufficiency of evidence are still applicable even when an intermediate standard of review is used. Insufficient evidence points should be sustained when (1) evidence is factually insufficient to support a finding by the preponderance of the evidence and (2) a finding is contrary to the great weight and preponderance of evidence which contradicts the finding. Calvert, “No Evidence” and “Insufficient Evidence” Points of Error, 38 TEX.L.REV. 361, 366 (1960). Likewise, an insufficient evidence point may be sustained when (1) evidence is factually insufficient to support a finding by clear and convincing evidence and (2) a finding is contrary to the weight of contradicting evidence so no trier of fact could reasonably find the evidence to be clear and convincing.
Appellant did not raise a “no evidence” point of error. Our decision should have no relevance to the stаndard of review for “no evidence” points because the definition of “no evidence” should not be altered by a higher standard of proof.
Contra Rodriguez v. Dept. of Human Services,
Appellant contends the State failed to meet its burden of proof because the children’s medical evaluations did not reveаl conclusive evidence of sexual abuse. Dr. Bruce Jacobsen of John Peter Smith Hospital, testified he examined both children, and the evidence was “suggestive but not conclusive of sexual assault.” Standing alone, this evidence would not be clear and convincing, but the trial court hеard other testimony.
Carolyn Badgett, a therapist at the Fort Worth Parenting Guidance Center, testified she first met the appellant in June 1982 after the Texas Department of Human Resources (currently Texas Department of Human Services) referred appellant to the Center’s Matеrnal Neglect Program. Bad-gett testified she tried to teach appellant to be a less neglectful mother, but appellant failed to maintain sanitary living conditions and continued to neglect her children. For example, on several occasions, Badgett arranged for аppellant to receive free cloth *68 ing for herself and the children. Then, Badgett learned the children did not have clean clothes because appellant kept asking for more new clothes instead of washing the dirty ones. Both children developed a bloody diaрer rash. L.R.M. testified appellant beat her with a stick.
In November 1983, appellant and O.D. were both confined in jail pending trial for committing a robbery. Appellant received probation and her probation officer counseled her not to associate with O.D. Appellant сontinued to associate with O.D., and the court heard evidence O.D. sexually abused L.R.M. L.R.M. testified O.D. sexually abused her and told her “[djon’t tell.” J.J.M. also testified O.D. sexually abused L.R.M. Pat Bowles of the Texas Department of Human Services testified L.R.M. is emotionally disturbed, is obsessed with sexual abuse, and repeаtedly talks about sexual abuse. Bowles also testified about previous allegations of sexual abuse. She testified that in 1983 L.R.M. suffered painful urination and complained someone had abused her, but appellant denied L.R.M. had been abused.
Appellant admitted she believed O.D. abused L.R.M., but she consistently denied she knew of the abuse before the night of August 23. Bowles testified she informed appellant of prior allegations and investigations, but appellant testified she was not aware of any allegations of sexual abuse until the night of August 23, 1986, when O.D.’s aunt told her O.D. was abusing L.R. M. Appellant clаimed she never heard O.D. had ever been suspected of child sexual abuse, but on cross-examination she admitted she knew O.D.’s aunt accused O.D. of sexually abusing her son. In short, appellant’s testimony was contradictory and self-serving. The jury heard testimony indicating appellant knew her child was being abused and O.D. was suspected of child sexual abuse.
The jury could have reasonably found O.D. sexually abused L.R.M., and appellant knowingly placed the children with O.D. thereby endangering their physical and emotional well-being. The jury heard testimony L.R.M. had been sexually abused and both children sufferеd in unsanitary conditions.
Compare Baxter,
Appellant did not challenge the trial court’s finding termination is in the best interest of the children. The State introduced evidence indicating termination was in the best interest of the children. We do not need to consider an issue not mentioned in a point of error.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
